- Leeds Arts Club
The Leeds Arts Club was founded in 1903 by the
Leeds school teacherAlfred Orage andYorkshire textile manufactureHolbrook Jackson , and was probably one of the most advanced centres for modernist (modernism ) thinking in Britain in the pre-First World War period. Its very existence challenges the idea that radical art and culture only happens in metropolitan centres.Following the departure of Orage and Jackson to London in 1907, there was a hiatus, until
Frank Rutter galvanised new activity.Herbert Read was influenced by events at the Club.History
The Leeds Arts Club, founded by
Leeds school teacherAlfred Orage andYorkshire textile manufactureHolbrook Jackson , was an iconoclastic organisation that mixed radicalsocialist andanarchist politics with the philosophy ofFriedrich Nietzsche ,Suffragette Feminism , the spiritualism of theTheosophical Society and modernist art and poetry into a heady mixture. It had close associations with theIndependent Labour Party , theco-operative movement and the earlyFabian Society . At its weekly meetings it would often discuss the connections between art, spiritualism, philosophy and politics.In 1907 Orage and Jackson left Leeds and moved to London to edit the hugely influential cultural and political journal "
The New Age ". Following their departure the Arts Club came under the sway ofFrank Rutter , the founder of theAllied Artists Association and newly appointed Director ofLeeds City Art Gallery , and Michael Sadler, the new Vice-Chancellor of theUniversity of Leeds . Under their leadership the Arts Club maintained its interest in the relationship between radical politics, spiritualism and art, but this was expanded to encompass earlypsychoanalysis and, most significantly,abstract art .Rutter initially had plans to create a modern art collection at the Leeds City Art Gallery, but had been frustrated in this aim by "boorish" local councillors.Owen, Felicity (article credit). [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/54009 "Rutter, Francis Vane Phipson",] "
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography " (subscription required). Retrieved11 August 2008 .] He co-founded the Leeds Art Collections Fund with Sadler, to help acquisitions and shows, among one in June 1913 ofPost-Impressionism held at the Arts Club, which was reactivated by the new activity. The discussions there about contemporary art, and the presence of Rutter, had a significant influence on the thinking ofHerbert Read (1893–1968), who turned 20 in December 1913.Using his personal links with
Wassily Kandinsky inMunich , Sadler built up a remarkable collection ofexpressionist andabstract expressionist art at a time when such art was either unknown or dismissed in London, even by well-known promoters of modernism such asRoger Fry . Most notable in his collection was Kandinsky's abstract painting "Fragment for Composition VII", of 1912, which was in Leeds and on display at the Leeds Arts Club in 1912. He also ownedPaul Gauguin 's celebrated work "The Vision After the Sermon". According toPatrick Heron , Kandinsky even visited the Arts Club in Leeds before the First World War. [see Heron interview in B. Read and D. Thistlewood, "Herbert Read: A British Vision of World Art", London 1993]In many respects the Leeds Arts Club can be seen as the closest England came to a genuine expressionist art movement, and this was accentuated not only by its interests, which mirror those seen in German expressionist art groups of the time, but in the Club's direct links to Kandinsky in Germany. It also produced its own expressionist artists, including
Jacob Kramer and the little known, but remarkable, painter Bruce Turner. It also was the seed ground from which the eminent art critic and theoristHerbert Read emerged, andHenry Moore has been linked to it. If one takes Orage and Jackson's "New Age" as England's equivalent to the German expressionist journal "Der Sturm", then it seems reasonable to view the Leeds Arts Club as the centre of "English Expressionism".Notes and references
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